However, other media reports showed that around 23 Egyptian workers were been killed after a rocket attack hit their farm homes.

Abu Bakr, who is currently working in Cairo, said that the Libyan interior minister has informed him via a phone that there were no Egyptians reported to be killed in the rocket attack taking place in Tripoli's western Karimiya.

Abu Bakr also stressed that the Egyptian authorities have been in contact with Libyan hospitals and the forensic authorities to check whether or not Egyptian workers were among the casualties.

He added that the Egyptian foreign ministry has received confirmation from Tripoli hospitals that they have not received any Egyptians from the Karimiya rocket attack, but that they did receive the body of an Egyptian who died in other clashes near the Tripoli airport.

Abu Bakr also highlighted that the Egyptian Foreign Ministry has advised all Egyptians living in Tripoli and Benghazi to immediately evacuate.

He added that some Egyptians have begun moving to Tunisian borders and others have been trying to evacuate to safer Libyan cities.

Abu Bakr also stated that the Egyptian FM has sent a mission to Tunisian borders to help Egyptians willing to return back to their homeland.

The International Organisation for Migration estimates that 330,000 to 1.5 million Egyptians worked in Libya up until the ongoing unrest that began following the NATO-backed uprising that toppled Gaddafi in 2011. The number of Egyptian expats has sharply dwindled since.